THORNDIKE — Eight people were injured Sunday, including a woman who was taken by helicopter to a Bangor hospital, after a van carrying nine College of the Atlantic students and traveling north on Route 220 tried to turn west onto Crosby Brook Road and hit an oncoming van traveling south on 220, according to police.

State police Trooper Bethany Robinson, who was at the scene, said it appeared the College of the Atlantic GMC Savana van turned in front of the other van, a Ford conversion van.

“At this point it appears the GMC Savana failed to yield right-of-way to the oncoming conversion van driven by someone from out of state,” Robinson said. She said later Sunday that no charges would be filed in the crash.

A female student in the college van suffered a head injury and was taken by LifeFlight helicopter to Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor. Robinson said just before 3 p.m. that the student was in stable condition with non-life-threatening injuries.

Injuries to the other students, including the male driver, appeared to be non-life-threatening and they were taken to Inland Hospital in Waterville, Robinson said. Two students refused medical treatment, she said.

The driver of the Ford conversion van is from Pennsylvania and he was taken to Waldo County General Hospital in Belfast, where he was being treated Sunday afternoon for broken bones, according to Robinson. She said he was traveling alone at the time of the crash.

Advertisement

She would not release the names of either driver, saying they had not yet been able to notify their relatives of the accident.

The spectacular crash, which was reported at 11:45 a.m., drew a large response from state police, Thorndike and Unity fire departments, Brooks Ambulance, Unity Ambulance, Sebasticook Valley Ambulance and Delta Ambulance.

“Everyone worked really well together to keep everything safe,” Robinson said.

At the scene, the college van was in the ditch off Crosby Brook Road, facing Route 220, its entire right passenger side bashed in, the windows broken and gray metal twisted around the rear wheel. The Ford van was on Route 220 facing the college van, its front smashed in and windshield broken.

At the time of the crash, the college van was taking students from the school in Bar Harbor to the Maine Organic Farmers and Gardeners Association’s Common Ground fairgrounds in Unity and was about a half-mile from the fairgrounds.

“It was a field trip to the Common Ground exhibition hall for Great Maine Apple Day,” said Todd Little-Siebold, a history professor from College of the Atlantic who had already arrived at the fairgrounds with two students in a separate vehicle when the crash occurred.

Little-Siebold said the students traveling in the van were shaken up by the accident.

“One student broke a tooth,” he said.

After crash victims were taken to hospitals, Little-Siebold was in a group of people helping and comforting a young man and woman who appeared to be two students not taken to hospitals. Little-Siebold later emptied the van of backpacks, clothes, tote bags and other belongings, including a white bicycle that was in the back of the van, which apples were tumbling out of.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.